I just reminded myself of a work of art that when I was four was the most frightening thing I ever beheld.It wasn't a painting, but in this friend of my parent's living room hung a large semi-3D image composed of thin gold threads inter-woven around these small sticks on a pitch black velvet canvas. It was some type of night scene from a dock where galleons were coming to port. Each halyard was carefully incorporated in pristine order. The depth in composition and the portrayal of the deep and dark unknowns of the sea were enough to nearly frighten the wits out of any lad. Evil incarnate.

Katilaie, that's GREAT! It's really spooky, actually, considering that it feels like somebody is about to jump into the water from those docks, or what that might be?! This is certainly a shark. I love your water surface, too... very convincing! Really great job altogether!

Ok, here's mine.... I thought the idea to make something SPOOKY was great, Mike! Thanks! I did something interesting. The bottom layer is the sky and the sea, of course, but it was rather thick so that no canvas was showing through. At the very end I took brush #1 at low opacity and no fluidity to carefully erase the material with a screen sized brush size just so the canvas would poke through again. Thought that was neat.

Whoa, very lovely. Taron the quality of your work is incredibly high.Mine is gone in verve crashing Nirvana.It would be very lovely to have a warning if one exceeds the maximum possible canvas size.Or getting back the defaults, which were always safe?

Thanks! Argh, Knacki, sorry about that. I STILL need to hook up the error checking to avoid such troubles. On the other hand, I'm planning on working out an alternative that actually would be able to handle any resolution. Either way, I'm sorry, man.

Taron wrote:Katilaie, that's GREAT! It's really spooky, actually, considering that it feels like somebody is about to jump into the water from those docks, or what that might be?! This is certainly a shark. I love your water surface, too... very convincing! Really great job altogether!

Thanks. Those aren't docks. They're just underwater rock formations with moss and seaweed.